we will hear frederick douglas'' 1852 independence day address performed by james earl jones. plus, as gun deaths soar in the united states, we will look at the racist roots of the second amendment with emory professor carol anderson, author of the new book "the second: race and guns in a fatally unequal america." >> and as i went on this journey, what i saw was that it wasn't about guns. it was about the fear of black people. it was about the fear of blackness. it was about the societal labeling of black people as dangerous, as a threat to whites, and that this architecture comes in place in order to contain this black population, in order to provide security and safety to the white community from this fear of black people. amy: and we will re-air the inaugural poem by, at the time, 22-year-old amanda gorman, the youngest inaugural poet in u.s. history. >> we will rebuild, reconcile and recover in every known nook of our nation, in every corner called our country our people diverse and beautiful will emerge battered and beautiful. when day comes, we step out of the shade afla